Boycott: Weapon of the Weak Print E-mail
Monday, 16 July 2007

apartheid_flag.jpgThe UK Israel lobby has been hyperactive ever since the UCU passed the boycott motion against Israel. Earlier when the AUT passed a similar motion, no less a figure than Israel’s ultra right-wing former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was dispatched to counter the motion. Pressure groups like ‘Engage’ were set up and propaganda was ratcheted up to discredit civil society’s first attempt to hold Israel to account for its crimes against the Palestinian people. The web was saturated with drumbeat of piffle from the propaganda network Euston Manifesto, which is comprised exclusively of Zionist proponents of the invasion of Iraq. The new campaign is even more vicious, except this time it has completley dispensed with appearances of sophistication. Recently the Zionist lobby group Engage organized another event aimed at discrediting the Left for taking meaningful, peaceful action against the Israeli Apartheid system. While in the past a Muslim Uncle Tom or two would be corralled in to give some legitimacy to the proceedings, any claims at ethnic inclusivity were dispensed with altogether this time. But I believe the ‘anti-Semitism’ card has been overplayed, and it would take a lot more than mere crying wolf to reverse the tide of the mounting BDS campaign.

Here is Ghada Karmi’s excellent piece from Ha’aretz. (For other great arguments in favour of the boycott, check out Gabriel Ash’s ‘Why Boycott Israel? Because It’s Good for You‘, and ‘Why the Boycott of Israel is Justified‘)

"In conflicts, boycotts are the weapons of the weak. Their chief importance lies in their ability to raise public awareness and arouse disapproval. Yet, going by the paranoid reaction to the academic boycott of Israel, it might as well have been a declaration of nuclear war. No peaceable action in recent times has provoked so much anger and hostility as this British-based boycott.

In the wake of the British University and College Union’s vote at its annual general meeting on May 30 to initiate a national debate on a boycott of Israeli academic institutions, a wave of hysteria engulfed Israel and its friends. Articles appeared, before and after the vote, denouncing the UCU resolution and its initiators, and heated correspondence is still ongoing. Threats were made against members of the boycott group by pro-Israel organizations and individuals, and campaigns were mounted to defeat the boycott. Costly one-page advertisements appeared in The Times and The Guardian, carrying the names of scores of eminent signatories opposing the boycott.

[Most of these articles come from the same battery of individuals that comprise Engage and Euston Manifesto]

Photographs of the boycott’s “ringleaders,” like those of wanted criminals, appeared on the front page of the major British Jewish weekly, The Jewish Chronicle, which also carried a distressed article by Britain’s chief rabbi condemning the boycott as an anti-Semitic “witch hunt.” The Daily Mail’s Jewish columnist Melanie Phillips declared “the age of reason” over. The Jewish-American lawyer and fierce warrior for Israel Alan Dershowitz has teamed up with his British counterpart, Anthony Julius, to take legal action against British supporters of the boycott. While this would not be valid in British law, its aim is clearly to intimidate.

The fuss has not abated yet, and more battles lie ahead this autumn as pressure is exerted upon the UCU to ballot its members individually, in the hope that they will reject the motion passed by the conference.

Two major misconceptions lie at the base of this response, both deliberately fostered. The first misconception is that the boycott is aimed against individual Israeli academics, and the second, and more important, is that it is anti-Semitic.

With regard to the first misconception, the boycott in fact calls for a ban on dealings with Israeli academic institutions, for example, for not participating in joint research, conferences or other collaborative activity. In a malicious misrepresentation of this position, opponents claim that the boycott will end the free exchange of ideas with individual Israelis and encourage discrimination against them within British academia. By suppressing “free speech,” goes the argument, this would end any hope of change in Israel’s policies that academics could have brought about. This is an erroneous argument, and it has galvanized opposition to the boycott in Britain .

The charge of anti-Semitism follows closely on this. The allegation is that the real reason for the boycott is hatred of Jews, a new outbreak of an old gentile affliction. Nothing is more designed to provoke and mislead than this charge, which, its authors know, antagonizes all Jews and many non-Jews.

In fact, of course, the imputation of anti-Semitism is a red herring, as so often is the case when Israel is criticized, and its aim, as always, is to deflect criticism. In the case of the British boycott committee, it is particularly inapt, since most of the members are Jewish. The campaign started in 2004 with a letter that two British scholars, Hilary and Steven Rose, published in The Guardian, calling for a boycott of Israeli academic and cultural institutions, in support of a similar call by Palestinian civil society organizations. These, representing a majority of Palestinian academics and other professionals, had united to form a campaign for boycotting Israel because of its repressive policies against them.

The letter in The Guardian spearheaded a growing demand for Israel to be called to account for its policies, which was soon joined by many academics in Europe and beyond. Support was particularly strong in South Africa, which had lived through a similar boycott during the apartheid era, and was especially sympathetic to the boycott’s rationale and aims. Since that time, the boycott and divestment campaign against Israel has grown, resulting in the Association of University Teachers’ Union voting for a boycott against two Israeli universities at its meeting in 2005. Thanks to a vigorous pro-Israel campaign against it, the decision was overturned within a month. But the issue did not go away, and resulted in the vote for the boycott two years later by the newly formed UCU, which had absorbed the AUT.

Academic boycotts are not new to Britain. In 1965, a boycott campaign against apartheid South Africa was initiated by 34 universities in response to a call for solidarity by the African National Congress. After a prolonged British campaign, the boycott was adopted as policy by the AUT in 1988 and remained in place until the end of apartheid.

The academic boycott against Israel is no different. Israel’s well-documented repression of Palestinian academic life and victimization of Palestinian teachers and students is a scandal to be denounced by all those who claim to care about academic freedom. Rather than rushing to Israel’s defense in a situation so perverse and immoral, all efforts should be directed toward boycotting all Israeli institutions. Only when Israel is made a pariah state, as happened with South Africa, will its people understand tha they cannot trample on another people’s rights without penalty.

Ghada Karmi is the author of “Married to Another Man: Israel’s Dilemma in Palestine.”

Source: fanonite.org




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Readers have left 4 comments.
Darren: Quote

If the boycott is "The Weapon of The Weak" then you declare that you have lost the argument since you are so weak that a meaningless gesture like a boycott isn't going to work.

You acknowledge that you are left with your weakest argument.

The NUJ boycott collapsed. See journalists reporting from Israel NOT boycotting Israel products?

The UCU boycott is collapsing because the members demand a debate about it and the groundswell opinion is that it will be overturned.

The UK government is against it.

One or two committed nutters will avoid buying a Carmel avacado but should any academic refuse to deal with an Israeli academic I assure you the maximum publicity and corresponding retaliation will be great publicity AGAINST the boycott.

I never can figure out how boycotters of Israeli products still have to rely on Israeli products in PC's , operating systems and the Internet.


The loony left. Gesture politics because they are bored and impotent.

BTW - read up on Engage and people like David Hirsh. He may be a Zionist but he is also a stern critic of Israel.
(1) 2007-07-16 08:00:49
RSD: Quote

While the condemnation of Israel's human rights record may be very well justified, it is hard to understand why Israel out of the plethora of allegedly oppressive states is singled out for boycotts and sanctions. The proponents have singularly failed to come up with a rational argument to support their assertions. This failure gives credence to the claim that it is anti-semitism that is behind the calls for action against Israel.
Oddly the academics who call for a boycott of Israel are strangely silent over China. The People's Republic of China has been illegally occupying Tibet since the mid-1950's, has settled Han Chinese to build its own ethnic majority and has brutalised the Tibetans in ways that over-shadow anything that the Israelis have done. I suppose one could claim that as the Tibetans are not Muslims then they are not a concern of the Muslim world. If that were the case then why are the same proponents of sanctions against Israel silent about the oppression of the native muslim Uighur population of Xinjiang province in western China by Han Chinese and the colonisation by Han Chinese there to ensure that the Uighur and other Turkomen peoples are not able to assert the right of local autonomy specified in the Chinese constitution.
This inconsistency amongst academics and others in relation to boycotts of oppressive regimes suggests bias which in this case can only explained by endemic anti-semitism.
Perhaps the lesson for the Zionists is that were the state of Israel to become a Mukabarat dictatorship and end multi-party electoral government (like the neighbouring states which are not subject to calls for sanctions), then UK academia would end calls for sanctions. - An interesting lesson
(2) 2007-07-16 08:40:47
Cappie: Quote

another very pitiful attempt to talk about israel in a non-intellectual manner. Are you surprised that you are now a howling measure of amusement? THIS is your case?

I mean, no wonder you guys keep on getting walked over all the time if this is your level of intellectual engagement. Boycott?

so when are you boycotting Sudan or Congo? when you do that, we will talk about Israel. Oh!, how about boycotting the UK? since it participated in the Iraq war? boycott yourself, lol

silly chaps
(3) 2007-07-16 09:37:55
Boycott is Big Mistake: Quote

There is one obvious reason why boycotts of Israel should be avoided. Even leaving aside arguments of anti-Semitism or their effectiveness, the aim of a boycott is to force someone to do something.

In South Africa, the apartheid regime was a unilateral action. A boycott could force those enforcing apartheid to stop.

In Israel the issue is one of occupation. The final aim of the boycott must surely be to make Israel decide that it must comply with the will of the boycotters. But, to end the occupation Israel must negotiate with the Palestinians. Unilateral withdrawal from Gaza was condemned precisely because it was unilateral. So, do the boycotters want to force Israel to act even more unilaterally?

If they want an effective peace then surely they should boycott both sides and force them to come to an agreement. By boycotting only Israel they are (if they manage to achieve anything) furthering Israeli unilateralism.
(4) 2007-07-16 18:28:14
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